Central Grisons and Anterior Rhine
Hard-to-read day. Persistent or gliding-snow problems can mask the real risk.
In the north, the storm-force northerly winds are transporting the large volumes of fresh snow and, towards the south in particular, also the old snowpack. This is resulting in all regions in snowdrift accumulations that are prone to triggering; in the north these accumulations are becoming large. Fresh and drifted snow is being deposited on variable surfaces: on north-facing slopes, especially in sheltered locations, onto very loose snow, whereas up to high altitudes on south-facing slopes often onto a crust. In many cases, the surface of the old snowpack has also been profiled by the wind and is irregular.
In the inneralpine regions of Valais and Grisons in particular, distinct weak layers remain in near-ground layers of the snowpack. In addition, near-surface layers in locations sheltered from the wind contain snow-covered surface hoar, in which avalanches have repeatedly been triggered over the last week Avalanches are likely to triggered with increasing frequency in the old snowpack in these regions.
After a mainly clear night, the morning was mostly sunny. From midday, heavy cloud gathered from the northwest, with precipitation setting in in the afternoon. The snowfall level dropped from 1500 m to around 1000 m.
A few centimetres on the northern flank of the Alps
At midday at 2000 m, around 0 °C in the northwest, elsewhere around +3 °C
There will be widespread snowfall down to low altitudes, and this will be heavy in the night in the north. The south will be mostly dry with sunny intervals.
From Wednesday afternoon to Thursday afternoon, above 1000 m:
Cold, at midday at 2000 m between -10 °C in the north and -6 °C in the south
Storm-force northwesterly to northerly
Overnight to Friday snow will continue to fall in the north down to low altitudes. A further 15 to 30 cm of snow is expected on the northern Alpine ridge, elsewhere less. Precipitation will come to an end in the morning and conditions will become increasingly sunny from the west. The south will be dry and mostly sunny. During the night the wind will be a strong to storm-force northerly, veering northeasterly and easing somewhat over the course of the day.
Overnight the danger of dry avalanches will continue to increase somewhat in the north, but will not change significantly during the day and in the south. With solar radiation, moist snow slides from the fresh snow are to be expected in the afternoon.
The night to Saturday will be mostly clear. The day will start mostly sunny, but cloud will move in from the northwest in the afternoon. The wind will be a light to moderate northeasterly. Temperatures will become somewhat milder, with the zero degree level rising in the north to around 1200m and in the south to around 2000 m.
The danger of dry avalanches will decrease in all regions. With solar radiation, moist snow slides from the fresh snow are to be expected.
Issued
26 Mar 07:00 UTC
Valid until
26 Mar 16:00 UTC
Next update
26 Mar 16:00 UTC
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